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1. Limited liability company (LLC) is a legal entity with a number of shareholders not exceeding 50. LLC’ share capital is divided into shares according to foundation documents. Limited liability company can not have only one shareholder. 2. Shareholders Shareholders of LLC can be both privates and legal entities (either residents or nonresidents of Belarus). 3. Share capital The minimum amount of share capital of LLC is not defined by legislation and established by a decision of shareholders. Prior to state registration of LLC share capital shall be paid up in full. Assets transferred as a contribution to the share capital, as well as property acquired by LLC, is owned by LLC, not by its shareholders. Contributions of shareholders to the share capital may be money, securities, other property, including property rights, or other alienable rights, that can be monetary valued. 4. Founding documents Founding document of LLC is the Charter. 5. Responsibility of shareholders The shareholders are not charged with LLC’s responsibilities and are only responsible to the extent of the value of their contributions to the share capital. Shareholders who have made contributions not fully, jointly and severally liable for its obligations to the value of the unpaid portion of the contribution of each Members of the Company. Exception: if a bankruptcy of LLC is caused by its shareholders or other persons, who have rights to give obligatory instructions for the legal entity, such persons, in case of insufficiency of LLC’s assets, are liable to subsidiary responsibility. It must be proved in the court that exact acts of this person(s) caused the bankruptcy. 6. Basic rights and obligations of shareholders Rights:
Responsibilities:
7. LLC’s liability Company is responsible for its obligations with all property belonging to him. Community is not liable for the obligations of the founders, except as provided by law. 8. Managing and controlling bodies. A supreme managing body is a General Meeting of Shareholders (GMS). It holds annual and extraordinary meetings. The annual meeting approves annual reports, balance sheets, profits and losses accounts and distribution of profits and losses of company and must be held within three months after the end of each year. As a supreme managing body GMS makes the most important decisions, majority of which cannot be delegated to any other governing body. Different types of decisions need to be secured by a certain quorum to be approved by the general meeting. Another managing body is a Board of Directors (Supervisory Board), it is not an executive body and is appointed by GMS. Its establishment is obligatory only for joint stock companies with the quantity of stockholders exceeding 50 persons. Other companies may establish the above managing body on their discretion. As to the executive body of a company, the law provides the option of choosing between sole or a corporate body. Director or General Director is a sole executive body of company appointed by GMS. Director is in charge for company’s activities and takes appropriate decisions, not referred to the competence of GMS or Board of Directors (Supervisory Board). It is also possible to create corporate executive body - Directorate – consisting of at least 3 persons, managed by General Director. A controlling body is an Inspector (Inspection Commission) appointed by General Meeting of Shareholders. According to the Law On companies shareholders or director can not be appointed as an Inspector. The Inspector’s responsibilities are:
Examination of the Inspector’s report prepared as the result of the annual inspection is necessary at the annual meetings of shareholders before approval of annual reports, balance sheets, profits and losses accounts and distribution of profits and losses, as well as distribution of dividends or losses. 9. Estimated costs associated with the state registration of ALC.
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